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Jul 24, 2011
07/11
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among their alleged victims, his own girlfriend deborah davis. >> back in those days before dna was in use to identify victims, he would personally get involved in cutting off the fingers or hands of the victims and extracting their teeth. >> reporter: tom fuentes ran the organized crime squad for fbi headquarters. give me three words to describe bulger. >> stone cold killer. >> reporter: why kill debbie davis? authorities say she knew bulger's secret connection with anothanother kip anotheran connally. >> for him it was like meeting ted williams. the idea of equating -- >> reportep >> reporter:>> baseball player. >> -r >> -- >> -- to p ththarthat showp that valuvalues anp values aval p world that world tha connally. >> reporter: conley was a young >> reporter: conley was a young ambitious fbi agent who grew up in the same housing projects. back in the '70s and '80s the fbi's number one priority was taking down the italian mafia. bulger became a prized informant. >> he did everything including breaking all kinds of laws over the years to keep that alive. >> reporter: in a series of gro
among their alleged victims, his own girlfriend deborah davis. >> back in those days before dna was in use to identify victims, he would personally get involved in cutting off the fingers or hands of the victims and extracting their teeth. >> reporter: tom fuentes ran the organized crime squad for fbi headquarters. give me three words to describe bulger. >> stone cold killer. >> reporter: why kill debbie davis? authorities say she knew bulger's secret connection with...
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Jul 24, 2011
07/11
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deborah feyerick takes you inside one of the biggest manhunts in fbi history. [ bagpipes ] >> reporter: the church bells of saint monica near the harbor in south boston have sounded for generations of irish immigrants. [ bell ringing ] >> reporter: it is a tight-knit community that's always protected its own, a place james "whitey" bulger, one of boston's most notorious gangsters, called home. bulger learned to fight and survive on the mean streets of south boston, known as southy to locals like john shay who would decades layer later, work for bulger. >> the guy was legendary. he made tough guys shake. he made them shake. >> reporter: bulger's life of crime started early. arrested in his teens he was robbing banks by age 20. his shock of blond hair earning him the name "whitey" a name he's said to despise. with his rugged good looks and reckless flamboyance, bulge jer imagined himself boston's version of hollywood gangster jimmy cagney. instead of red carpets, he was headed to alcatraz. a string of bank robberiesland landing bulger ten years in federal prison at age 25. he did his tim
deborah feyerick takes you inside one of the biggest manhunts in fbi history. [ bagpipes ] >> reporter: the church bells of saint monica near the harbor in south boston have sounded for generations of irish immigrants. [ bell ringing ] >> reporter: it is a tight-knit community that's always protected its own, a place james "whitey" bulger, one of boston's most notorious gangsters, called home. bulger learned to fight and survive on the mean streets of south boston, known...
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Jul 17, 2011
07/11
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and this is in deborah's voice. anonymity is my vocation. i inhabit the last of my subjects until he can click on. behind the doors in a study, i wear them like a suit about today's close, telling their story, interpreting dreams, mimicking their voices as they type. i find that those most susceptible to those tuned to an impossible pitch, poets and wild eyed visionaries who live their lives close to the bone, hunting archives, leading letters composed in agony and journals pick with unspeakable thoughts. i found the internet as chambers of unquiet souls, under its dramas no one would ever think to make a. i think that's gorgeous and i gossett inc. that grave. and have you an insight as to why he your body of work calls each of these kinds of voices? >> well, it's kind of a vicarious existence. people read excessively about celebrities and poets in this state of various stripes. and i do feel that way, you know, they getting close to them and they are sort of trying to vibrate close to god, the god is my way of trying to see what it feels li
and this is in deborah's voice. anonymity is my vocation. i inhabit the last of my subjects until he can click on. behind the doors in a study, i wear them like a suit about today's close, telling their story, interpreting dreams, mimicking their voices as they type. i find that those most susceptible to those tuned to an impossible pitch, poets and wild eyed visionaries who live their lives close to the bone, hunting archives, leading letters composed in agony and journals pick with...
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trading at all time high levels as the best as are looking for safe haven due to all certainty over us deborah solution and silver is also gaining it's up over one percent the stock meanwhile wrangling over the u.s. debt ceiling keeps long in the red light sweet is losing over a dollar a sour u.s. stocks opened lower as the political stalemate over the nation's debt limit continues that's up to the government reported that orders for durable goods felt in june the nasdaq composite index down thirty points or one point two percent. in europe markets are lower with washington's debt problems affecting invest in companies as well stocks in london are down the buy lloyds banking group barclays and world bank of scotland that's up to goldman sachs downgraded being a pin back in sector shares of insurers are also down i believe a drop two percent so with admiral group of illegal general group that drop one percent respectively here and russia markets retreated from earlier games with my six losing over half the sides as well fell the rest as our course is avoiding the risky moves ahead of economic r
trading at all time high levels as the best as are looking for safe haven due to all certainty over us deborah solution and silver is also gaining it's up over one percent the stock meanwhile wrangling over the u.s. debt ceiling keeps long in the red light sweet is losing over a dollar a sour u.s. stocks opened lower as the political stalemate over the nation's debt limit continues that's up to the government reported that orders for durable goods felt in june the nasdaq composite index down...
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point five trillion off dead and that starts the nomination of the budget it's not even the fiscal deborah including all of the unfunded liabilities that the united states government actually keeps of the books and if you include this figure really a looking at two hundred trillion us dollar of it's absolutely beyond control and all timidly it appears that the united states will be facing a sovereign debt crisis very much along the lines of the so-called pigs your. refinery as a bit also of the other european supposedly stronger countries so the expect a major major sovereign debt crisis from the major some countries. suggest that investors should stay out of the region and look for a form called sort of a commodity is taught to hedge for protect against what's going to occur well we'll talk about europe a little bit later in more detail but let's now focus on u.s. china relations we know that clinton is now a touring asian china's the largest foreign holder of u.s. debt and is particularly concerned is clinton's appeal to china and others not to lose faith in american economic model enoug
point five trillion off dead and that starts the nomination of the budget it's not even the fiscal deborah including all of the unfunded liabilities that the united states government actually keeps of the books and if you include this figure really a looking at two hundred trillion us dollar of it's absolutely beyond control and all timidly it appears that the united states will be facing a sovereign debt crisis very much along the lines of the so-called pigs your. refinery as a bit also of the...
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Jul 24, 2011
07/11
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. >> reporter: and according to deborah gordon, professor of biology at stanford, they do it all without a boss. >> in an ant colony there's nobody in charge. there are no bureaucrats. no foremen. there are no managers. there's nobody telling anybody what to do. >> reporter: wait a minute. don't ant colonies have queens? >> the qee does not give rules. she does not make proclamations. she just sits there and lays eggs. being the queen would be the most bore job in the ant society. >> reporter: okay. so the queen isn't in charge. but ladies do rule the colony. virtually any ant you ever see is a female. males just mate once and die. so all these females survive and thrive together. all without a leader. which can be hard for us humans to understand. >> we put a lot of effort into thinking through how to organize some of the things that we try to do as groups. ants don't put in any effort at all. they're pretty messy about it. it works really well. >> reporter: most ants, it turns out, simply follow the crowd. and now it turns out scientists are following ants to attack one of life's most
. >> reporter: and according to deborah gordon, professor of biology at stanford, they do it all without a boss. >> in an ant colony there's nobody in charge. there are no bureaucrats. no foremen. there are no managers. there's nobody telling anybody what to do. >> reporter: wait a minute. don't ant colonies have queens? >> the qee does not give rules. she does not make proclamations. she just sits there and lays eggs. being the queen would be the most bore job in the...
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Jul 17, 2011
07/11
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. >> and now on book tv, deborah baker talks about the life of margaret marcus, a secular jewish woman from new york who, in 1962, moved to pakistan and converted converted to islam. >> welcome to the 27 annual chicago tribune printer's row late fest, a special thank youal to our sponsors. row before we begin today's programr please turn off your cell phone and all other electric devices. and photographs are not permitted. today's program will be recorded for future broadcast and c-span. is book tv.m wile if there is time at the end for a q&a session with the author we
. >> and now on book tv, deborah baker talks about the life of margaret marcus, a secular jewish woman from new york who, in 1962, moved to pakistan and converted converted to islam. >> welcome to the 27 annual chicago tribune printer's row late fest, a special thank youal to our sponsors. row before we begin today's programr please turn off your cell phone and all other electric devices. and photographs are not permitted. today's program will be recorded for future broadcast and...
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Jul 19, 2011
07/11
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here is deborah kostren. >> it was a bright day tote. taking a look at numbers, dow, s and p and nasdaq posting huge gains after several solid earnings reports and after the president endorsing a deficit-cutting proposal by a bipartisan group of senators calling this proposal, quote good news and say it may help move negotiations on the deficit and elsewhere, the obama administration is asking for a promise to reevaluate rules by 2025. the administration has a 56 mile per gallon target up from current 27 miles per gallon. but auto makers are saying necessary technology isn't yet in place, and this would take place midway through a program slated in 2017. >> and ask any die hard shopperer, finding a good deal could be a religious experience. a couple claims an image of jesus's face showed up on their walmart receipt. workers say the ink is activated by heat. >> i was looking on the floor. you can see the receipt, he was looking at me. the only way you can get it right is to put heat on it. if it was on the floor and heat hit it? how could
here is deborah kostren. >> it was a bright day tote. taking a look at numbers, dow, s and p and nasdaq posting huge gains after several solid earnings reports and after the president endorsing a deficit-cutting proposal by a bipartisan group of senators calling this proposal, quote good news and say it may help move negotiations on the deficit and elsewhere, the obama administration is asking for a promise to reevaluate rules by 2025. the administration has a 56 mile per gallon target up...
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Jul 4, 2011
07/11
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deborah barnhart is the chief here at space camp. >> reporter: what do you say then? the space shuttle program is ending with "atlantaiis""atlant" but that's going to end this year. what is then for the space camp? >> it's like a graduation to me. we're moving on in our national space program to something else. >> reporter: these campers have lots of ideas for that something else. what do you want to do when you go to space? >> go to mars. >> i'm going to be the first woman on mars. >> reporter: high five, sister. >> i know one day we're going to live on other planets. >> reporter: you think so? >> definitely. >> reporter: how are we going to breathe? >> there will be oxygen generators. >> reporter: as far-fetched as it sounds, these whiz kids are are right on target. barnhart says they are already planning that next phase of space camp to include inflatable space habitats. what's an inflatable? >> you can launch a structure, collapsed inside of a rocket. once you get it into space, pressurize it, like an inflatable balloon. they're inflatable structures that can be u
deborah barnhart is the chief here at space camp. >> reporter: what do you say then? the space shuttle program is ending with "atlantaiis""atlant" but that's going to end this year. what is then for the space camp? >> it's like a graduation to me. we're moving on in our national space program to something else. >> reporter: these campers have lots of ideas for that something else. what do you want to do when you go to space? >> go to mars. >>...
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Jul 23, 2011
07/11
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deborah king, who unfortunately was unable to make it due to a family emergency, a medical emergency, he wrote an interesting paper regarding mrs. obama and her role as a mother which we will eventually get to with regard to dr. gilkes. >> but not right now. you mean when they come back around. >> yes. our next panelist is dr. hill and he has written a fascinating book on obama and "the first black president." i have a number of questions for him but i will start with one. the most important question i believe about the contribution of this work is that the obama administration is a direct legacy of martin luther king and would you explain that to us? >> sure. before i sort of address that question directly i want to sort of provide a brief context for the conversation. i think that the biggest challenge is that when obama's him the presidency, it was tremendously symbolic in many ways, just to sort of echo dr. reid's comments about some questions about sort of how successful his administration would be within the context of the historic importance of his presidency. one should not in
deborah king, who unfortunately was unable to make it due to a family emergency, a medical emergency, he wrote an interesting paper regarding mrs. obama and her role as a mother which we will eventually get to with regard to dr. gilkes. >> but not right now. you mean when they come back around. >> yes. our next panelist is dr. hill and he has written a fascinating book on obama and "the first black president." i have a number of questions for him but i will start with one....
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Jul 28, 2011
07/11
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cnn's deborah feyerick joins us with more from new york. >> really the problem is even though it's been almost ten years for doctors for the medical community, it's not enough time to develop actual scientific proof that exposure to ground zero toxins causes cancer where the lack of evidence comes in and why cancers are not covered under the act. to the surprise many were healthy on 9/11. the justice department is having these town hall meetings in new york city to explain the new victims compensation act. but the main topic was the decision not to cover cancer-stricken first responds and those who were at ground zero and working and living in the vicinity of the massive burning debris. a man who spent three months working at ground zero and the fresh kills land center where the world trade center debris was taken, five years later, he was diagnosed with throat cancer. >> i just think this is an injust to people who have cancer. i'm a retired police detective. down there for three months. i'm the lucky one because i have health insurance. all of these other people have cancer and don't
cnn's deborah feyerick joins us with more from new york. >> really the problem is even though it's been almost ten years for doctors for the medical community, it's not enough time to develop actual scientific proof that exposure to ground zero toxins causes cancer where the lack of evidence comes in and why cancers are not covered under the act. to the surprise many were healthy on 9/11. the justice department is having these town hall meetings in new york city to explain the new victims...
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Jul 3, 2011
07/11
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um, well, i have my friends, all my friends i love their work, you know, deborah hedge, miranda hitchcock, you know, eric gainsworth, you know, there are all kinds of writers who we know each other, and they're excellent writers. so, but i think when it comes to, you know, who influences me the most it would be probably the ones that i've named. and darcy mcnick old from, he was turn of the century flathead. some of the writers who are also very capable of saying little with, saying a lot with few words, um. scott momaday has a brilliant novel, very difficult. took me three tries to get into it. so those are -- and they are, those are fairly well known writers. but most of us aren't, you know, the thing is that there are some -- it's a world of token writers that you hear about a few, and there's only room for a few. it's like when -- it's like applying for a job and saying, oh, we already hired an indian, you know? it's not like whether you're a writer or not. it's like, oh, we're not thinking of you as a professional, we're thinking of you as an ethnic whatever. and, um, it's the same w
um, well, i have my friends, all my friends i love their work, you know, deborah hedge, miranda hitchcock, you know, eric gainsworth, you know, there are all kinds of writers who we know each other, and they're excellent writers. so, but i think when it comes to, you know, who influences me the most it would be probably the ones that i've named. and darcy mcnick old from, he was turn of the century flathead. some of the writers who are also very capable of saying little with, saying a lot with...
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Jul 21, 2011
07/11
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deborah feyerick, cnn, new york. >>> it's hot and steamy everywhere you go, and no end in sight. this is one out july. >> and not far from where i grew up in omahas, 123 is what it faelt like yesterday. we just chatted like this. you have all been in steam rooms, and saunas, they turn them up to 170 degrees, and steam rooms go to 105, but steam rooms feel like 200 degrees in there, and at 105 the feels-like temperature is 200, and the sauna feels like 140, because the body sweats and the sweat evaporates. unbelievable to understand that 105 is actually warmer and hotter on the body than 170 just because of the humidity. and the humidity is the problem in the northeast. new york, philadelphia, richmond, and all the way down into d.c., the relative humidity today will be almost 100% in the morning, and 15 or 20% lower than that in the afternoon, makes the feel-like temperature about 105. tomorrow 109, and d.c. 106. i can't imagine what it feels like somewhere down on the eastern shore, along the potomac, and along the chesapeake, where you are in the swamp, anyway -- >> i will call
deborah feyerick, cnn, new york. >>> it's hot and steamy everywhere you go, and no end in sight. this is one out july. >> and not far from where i grew up in omahas, 123 is what it faelt like yesterday. we just chatted like this. you have all been in steam rooms, and saunas, they turn them up to 170 degrees, and steam rooms go to 105, but steam rooms feel like 200 degrees in there, and at 105 the feels-like temperature is 200, and the sauna feels like 140, because the body sweats...
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Jul 15, 2011
07/11
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deborah feyerick takes a serious look at his reign in terror in boston in a special this sunday night, cnn presents "stone cold killer" here with a preview of it. more scary than he was portrayed in the movie. >> i spoke to somebody who knew bulger and nicholson and said nicholson was a little tame in his depiction of the character of whitey bulger. when whitey bulger was arrested back in june he remained defiant, he refused to get on the ground before being hand cuffed and he told one of the arresting agents that, in fact, you did its right way. what he was referring to, was the fact that agents had lured him into the garage rather than arrest him in his apartment. it's possible whitey bulger at 81 years old may have been ready for a shoot-out. he had assault rifles, shotguns, a silencer, automatic pistols, revolvers, 30 altogether. the fbi knew that when they went to get him, he would be armed and dangerous. >> reporter: bulger's life of crime started early. arrested in his teens, he was robbing banks by age 20. his shock of blonde hair earning him the name of whitey, a name he's sa
deborah feyerick takes a serious look at his reign in terror in boston in a special this sunday night, cnn presents "stone cold killer" here with a preview of it. more scary than he was portrayed in the movie. >> i spoke to somebody who knew bulger and nicholson and said nicholson was a little tame in his depiction of the character of whitey bulger. when whitey bulger was arrested back in june he remained defiant, he refused to get on the ground before being hand cuffed and he...
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Jul 21, 2011
07/11
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. >>> next on reporter roulette, deborah feyerick is in new york, watch there. >> for british tabloids like the recently deceased "news of the world" it appears that everyone everywhere was fair game. actors, business tycoons, royals, prime ministers, politicians, all potential front-page fodder, caught up in a type of scandal-driven journalism that bordered arguably on bloodsport. >> they very much crossed the line. they didn't just do it once or twice. we're not talking about a single rogue reporter. apparently it happened at least 4,000 times. >> bonnie fuller has been the driving force behind magazines like "star" "us weekly" and now "hollywood life." you have a stronger takedown culture in the british tabloids. they're nastier, and they look to tear down people. >> the journalists who were able to do that, it's just not that complicated. >> reporter: john abell walled us through the most common techniques. shockingly easy. >> most people don't change their p.i.n. or passwords. once they're able to correlate a specific phone numb with a carrier, all they had to do was dial into tha
. >>> next on reporter roulette, deborah feyerick is in new york, watch there. >> for british tabloids like the recently deceased "news of the world" it appears that everyone everywhere was fair game. actors, business tycoons, royals, prime ministers, politicians, all potential front-page fodder, caught up in a type of scandal-driven journalism that bordered arguably on bloodsport. >> they very much crossed the line. they didn't just do it once or twice. we're not...
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Jul 15, 2011
07/11
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deborah feyerick looks into that. >> i met whitey between the age of 15 and 16. >> reporter: john shay, nicknamed red, grew up in a tight knit world of south boston's old housing colony projects. a golden glove boxer with a wild streak wanted to be just like whitey bulger and the gangsters who ran southy. >> over there is colony project an over here the harbor projects where whitey grew up and santa monica church. next to there is the liquor store and the video store where it was base of operation. the guy was legendary. >> reporter: shay says bulger was the undisputed king of southy. >> he wanted to be as strong asbestos powerful and as rich as he could with. >> reporter: whitey was the toughest of them all. >> are you kidding me? he made tough guys shake. he made them shake. >> reporter: raised by a single mom, shay looked up to bulger as a father figure and mentor and s shay worked for bulger as enforcer shaking down debtors and in a bizarre negotiation he took to a basement and pulled a gun. >> it was called a test and that is when i had become the boss after that. >> reporter: and
deborah feyerick looks into that. >> i met whitey between the age of 15 and 16. >> reporter: john shay, nicknamed red, grew up in a tight knit world of south boston's old housing colony projects. a golden glove boxer with a wild streak wanted to be just like whitey bulger and the gangsters who ran southy. >> over there is colony project an over here the harbor projects where whitey grew up and santa monica church. next to there is the liquor store and the video store where it...
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Jul 4, 2011
07/11
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[applause] i want to thank the director jonathan flora and his wife and producer, deborah. [applause] un your team have worked very -- you and your team have worked very hard and i wish you all the best with the film. -- you and your team out of free hard and i wish you all the best with the film. i am proud of it. congratulations with the july 4 launch. if what i need each are in the course for my new foundation, it takes all hands on deck to keep the engine running and the ship steaming ahead. this mission could not be accomplished without the support of a fantastic team. some of them are here today and i want to say thank you to stacey will, then robyn, eric matthews, and especially judy otter, and has worked round- the-clock to make the launch of the foundation for a success. thank you all. [applause] i am also thrilled to have one of the foundations founded to reader -- contributors here today, tony. he is a good friend and also executive producer of "lieutenant dan band: for the common good. he has given us tremendous supporter of the years and he is here today. thank
[applause] i want to thank the director jonathan flora and his wife and producer, deborah. [applause] un your team have worked very -- you and your team have worked very hard and i wish you all the best with the film. -- you and your team out of free hard and i wish you all the best with the film. i am proud of it. congratulations with the july 4 launch. if what i need each are in the course for my new foundation, it takes all hands on deck to keep the engine running and the ship steaming...